Blood pressure doesn’t have a strict “age-based normal” that changes a lot, but there are typical reference ranges used in medical practice. The most important standard is still the same for adults: below 120/80 mmHg.
Here’s a simple breakdown by age group:
🧒 Children (1–12 years)
- Normal range: ~90/60 to 110/70 mmHg
- BP varies mainly with height and body size rather than age alone
🧑 Teenagers (13–18 years)
- Normal range: ~100/60 to 120/80 mmHg
- Close to adult values by late teens
🧑 Adults (18–39 years)
- Normal: below 120/80 mmHg
- Typical range: ~110/70 to 120/80 mmHg
🧑🦳 Middle-aged adults (40–59 years)
- Typical range: ~115/75 to 130/85 mmHg
- Slight rise may occur due to lifestyle and vessel changes
👴 Older adults (60+ years)
- Typical range: ~120/70 to 140/90 mmHg
- Mild increase can happen due to artery stiffness, but lower is still better if tolerated
⚠️ Universal Classification (All Adults)
- Normal: <120 / <80
- Elevated: 120–129 / <80
- High BP (Hypertension Stage 1): 130–139 / 80–89
- High BP (Stage 2): ≥140 / ≥90
Key point
Doctors usually care more about consistent readings and overall heart risk than age alone.
If you want, I can also show you a chart for ideal BP during pregnancy or diabetes, or explain what causes BP to rise with age.